IMISIM 7 - - 'GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME - 173. ' •,I ' : T • 1 , i '& . N ' • Lfer art es. a. N ow styles. MASON &00 • - ' tenzStil ' 1 907 Cheetnutstreet. 'WEDDING .' - INVITA,TIONS : EN _,.c-rfkryi trLthe-itewest-stul-best-ntanner.--,LOUiS .I.A , btationer and 4,ngraver, .1034. , Chestnut • street. ~A ,, fe2o tf - - , - , __ _ '. • ' ~ '. '.• MARRIED.' • • • • • L.XWIS --- MOBTOls`.—On,the2Bth instant, at the 'resi dence of IMi pride s'parentil; Isaac 31. Lewis to Susle . o. -' 'Morton. all of Delaware county, Pa. ' . - by. M. rr AER—Failoll.T.',•On the. evening of the.2Btit Inst.. e the per. J. W. PeYidrines Marr, of St. I.ou is, to . 1%, Atte tight daughter of the late Vim. W. Knight..of .• ~ {emon own, l'at-e L t". •-•- , '.. 13.4.1 Oli—F,Eltli.Y:-.ota Tuesday afternoon, - , the ._,:ratils . bytliellev. J:1". - McCullough, Frederic': G. ...- iia t ipitliNew 'York. to Mettle W., daughter of I. B. leer?. or.this city. •No cards. . ~:- ~ I ~' iiIIITI:—.ELLIS.—pn fifth- day, 28th instant, by ';'.l , ll.extrite ceren2On_y, 'toward White;tif Winnebago, Fie. brsska, to Anna P. Ellis; of Pent, 31anor, Pa..' ' . - . - IJEPPIIEII.-Surldenly,of conge9tion of the bradii,.oct the 2811 i, inst., May Anna, vclfu of A. P:11 eecher, in the 27th year of her age. • • Tho .relativeg and friends only of the family arere • sneetfully. invited to attend the funeral, from her late resident:o,7o3l , 4)rd' Sixteenth street, on 1101011 W mere- Nov.7lst, at 11 o'clock. without further notice. "" Cheitnut Dill, on the 27th Caroline L., daughter of Rulings and the late Caroline E. Coivnerthwa it. • . Funeral services at St. Lukn'q Church, Germantown, .-. on N:ttiirdaY afternoon, at 4 o'eleCk. • • LEWPS.—In New York, on Woriiiegday, 27th inst., of remittent fever. Catharine Arabella, daughter of Wal • .11 and Arabella 11. Lewbi, in tile 12th year of her LOclcE.—Near Woodbury. N. J., on the 28th instant. AI7In. eon Of A. V. Locke. la the theear of his age. ITll.—Ortober 26tb;"Pi89, la Slat 'par of her age.l,ydia, wife of thelate Jaines S. Smith, Esq. Thc funeral son ices will be held at St. Peter's Church, Third and Pine streets. this (Friday) afternoon, at 4 • • o'clock P. M., punctually. WOOD.—On the morning of Ocioher 29tb, Diehard D. only child of IkiwArd It. and Mary K. Wood, in the thinl year of his nge. • • Funnrat from 1412 Spruce street, 14,12 o'clock, on . - 4 1 0 .11- • day, November Ist. • "WATER PROOFS FUR SUITS. BLACK" AND WRITE' REPELLAN TS; -- GOLD AND BLACK REPELLANT& DROWN AND WILTME REPELLANTS. lEYBdy LANDELL, Fourth and Arch LAL - N OTICES: OVERCOATS, With Special'Care and Regaid to S 'l' It 3L 31E . We ha ye Illanufacturcd our First Stock of OVERCOATS In Castors and Chinchillas. In Moscows, Whitneys and Beavers. In Plain and. Fancy Cloths. • . . In Tricots and Cheviots. In Meltonsand Fur. Beavers. • ALL THE -NiI:WEST COLORINGS AND MIXTURES Silk Facings and Velvet Collars, J.OHN WANAMAKER'S, SU and S2O. CHESTNUT Street. Q . Homeopathic' Hospital ' Fair, 17tis till' 30th November, AT HORTICULTURAL HALL Dom. THE SCIENCE OF LIFE. PROF. JAMES .11CCILINTOCK, M. D., ConunSusteßis) , _opular Lectures illuStrated with THE ac., in CONCERT lIALL, , MONDAY EVENING, Nov. lat.. at 8 o'clock , tooth:mica every evening, closinz TUESDAY EVENING, Nov. Bth • Two Private Lectures to Ladiee, WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY A TTIIRNOONS, Nov. 3 and 6 at 3 o'clock. Two Lectures to Gentlemen, SATURDAY and TUES DAY EVENINGS, Nov. 6 and O. Admission, Course Six Lectures. ' ' $1 00. To each Lecture 25, To be had at the Iran ; Trumpler's, tr. 6 Chestnut reet, and Dr . 81cCif n Lock S 0 tlic.e; P•M Race of reet. ocistrp PONEI7ILLE LECTURES.—WM. L. DENNIS. Esq., hae the pfeasuro to announce a course of Four Lectures, entitled •—TILE PONEY VILLE LECTURES." the first of which will be given 'on TUESDAY EVENING, R November p, 1869, at the ASSEMBLY BUILDING (large an S i.: übject , --"Dr. /pimp% of Pin:terrine. ' • . TUESDAY, Nov. 9,"Unr Church and Congregation.' • ' WEDNESDAY, Nov. 17 ,"Social Foesile. • TUESDAY, Nov. 23, ••11r.. Wigginv and Ifer Party.''' Tickets for the Course, with secured 5eat5,..,,,,,,19 Oa Single Lecture-, with secured seat ' 76 Admission Lecture at 8 o'cleck. Tickets can be had nt Trampler... 4 LX' ..851 Dab NOTICE-TO STOCKI . OFFICE NESQUEFIONING :VALLEY litAal +ROAD COMP4IIIT, 122 South Second street. • PIIILADELP/11.1, October 2S, 1862• Stocicholders aro hereby notified. that unpaid instal ments up to number six, inclusive, will be doe and pay able by the subscribers on and after- Novemberl proxi mo., at thittoffice. Thsoo who desire to'do iltrinnY Dar in full. and •inter est at the rate of Ten Per Cent. per annum will com mence on the day of payment. = fast.. , 11. WI ITNEY, Treasurer.; •• 11:1> HALL YOUNG 3IEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, 1210 CHESTNUT street. • The classes for instruction for 10C2-70 will be:organ ized the first week in November, in the following branches : PontnattalziPi. by , Prof: ; Shoemaker ; French. Prof. Jean B. Sue,; German, Prof. J. M. EL Abel ; Elocution, Prof. Rufus Adams, and Music, Prof. John Bower. , . Terms to members only one dollar for twenty leSsous. Application for admission to be made at the Rooms. oc27w I run rp§ 10" OFFICE OF THE PENNSYLVANIA IRON COMPANY, No. 407 Library street. • PHILADELPHIA, Oct.. 27, IStid. The Annual Meeting of the Stockholders will be held at the Office of the Company, on WEDNESDAY, the - 10th day of November, at 3 when , an election will be held for Directors to serve for the ensuing year. oc27w [mat§ •• • WILLIAAL J. BARB, Secretary.. • I'O'WOMAN . AND HER 311.4610 N , by Mts. Ilardinge, at Elereath and Wood streets, ott Friday at 8 P. M. Admittance, ID cents. .0c27.1tr ..!..'.. liOu THE GENUIE • LIEBUTS tract of Meat secures groat 000nomy, excellence in the preparation of beef tea. Bny none but filet made, by the "Lich* Extract of Meat Company." , Baron Lie.' Big's signature on every jar For sale by druggists and grocers. J. MILIIAIPB SBNii, 183 Broadway— New York. • ' • • • oc2Ow&S Btrp§ fr~ CHOICE PEAR . TREES FOR SALE Se•m," —atandard and dwarf—all HOUGHTON, 'vaieties, from a private fruit garden. J. S. OlneY P.o_, Second street turnpike, Philadelphia. oe2B 3tre .HAVANA CIGARS, FRESH portation, mado from thenew crop of tobacco. Gentlemen about laying in a supply of. Havana Cigars will •find my stock complete with all the leading brands. Fresh goods received daily and sold at a small margin above the cost of importation. hIcOARARER; Seven." tconth and Locust. ' 0c241-at rp§ 1109 GIRARD STREET. 1109 /1131391111.1,ANp PERI! 1111iD Doinitniente' for 1 , 449641: Maim open from 6A. M. to 9,n .31. HOWARD• HOSPITAL, NOS. 'lBlB _ and IMO liombard street,Thepeigiary Dopart num t. odical treatment and modicum innuettedgratttitduld.l to the poor. 7 , ' READ ! READ ! READ! TM portant to. Ladies l Ease, Economy, Loma. Witty .and NtYle I • • If you want shoes with all tho abovo qualities 'for Ladles, Misses, Childron and Youths,'you can 'obtain them at WEST'S, No. 234 S. Eleventh street. se2o7tf VAIiKESTOCK'S FARINA.-TRIII &reigned nro now receiving from the Mille t Fahne• Mock celebrated Lancaster county Farina, which they offer to the trade. JOB. B. BOSSIER & CO., &putt/ for Valuoesto"&, D)3 South Delaware avenue. • . . • - .-3 . 1 .-- ' 7 ;.:- ~ : i .._ s- --- e• -..-. -- •• • .., ,---..-: -: ..-••• •' : ......-'''':-- "::: - •:..:••.E,_: '':',•-• :.• • , ..-.' f- - ' ,- .• :- ' , a , - ' . f.• ... '-- : :., , .......:::•• '•••'. ....''' ';., ' :-.'. ~ '., • ..• ' ' '''. •'' ~•,,, - : ..• -.• ~:-.:- .....--.-.. "-. c , • . :' :'--:--- •• , ' ."'....,,,,-; __'-... -?•-• :-• -•-•.;:;..,,: re ,- 1 . „.',,..,..: ' ~ ... , J . ,. •: ;. 1.. , ... '...5 . .: - ~ 4 --,.. 1 ,1. : ..: i , ..,,,,,,, ; . '2 , .,'. - . :7• - r . .I.:' -.12,;.; - -•;:: ''.-',' ~--..,...: •• t' . ...`. , ...; ';',.-:- - .7 , .- 7 ,c; •i:- . ..,'..‘ , ' : '. • - .1..' ( .,1'.'i''.: 1 ..i ~- ,-,'.' : -..-., ;.,...; C . .,' , .•-,-,. :•....:':-...-;''.- .:.,:',',. ''..;" ',:i... . '..,,-,, '.•'.il''' . ' . .. ' ;1 , •'' :- ..- . ~.:-.:•••";..-, . ' . . :--- r..' , '''' . . - ' At.; , ,, :,,, , • - , • •- , ... . , _ . ' • .. . . . . . , , . •,. .-. ,• , .•'• :.' ~. . , -..,.;,. .-..,. ..',i . , ~. I _ • , . ~ . . • , • ..• . . ...,1: , 11. . . ~ P . . ~. ~ , . Tranulated for the Philadelphia: Evening Bulletln.] DETAILS or THE LAST DAYS: SAINTE-DEUTZ: , ; . . . ' From tbelipro of October When Dr. Gessolin (surgeon of La ()barite . _hospital) came, at ten o'clock yesterday morn log, to the'bedaide of Af T - ,Shinte-Benve, Whteh -- .„ - Dr ; Veyne (one of the oldestfrienes of the pa tientj . had been watching without quitting for some time Karst,; the two physicians looked at each other and ceinprohended. The patient was lost! . .At half-past one Sainte-Beuve xiiired, at. tended by Dr Sreyne, bl. Trouba score_ tary t and a woman Who haidirected his houSe. if bold,.ror fifteen Yearskand7who r raring . this • t long period of his incessant suffering, has lavished upon him the most devoted and touch ing attentions._ During the latter part of his sickness and' especially the last, three days, these attentions have been such that Sainte 13euve could not cease praising the devoted woman, 'and continually 'itpeated that an angel-was- watching at bis pillow. The- last hour of Sainte-Beuve was completely silent the words which his lips endeavored to. whisi• per could not be' heard; when ho died the three persons who surrounded himicould hear a faint cry, whichpassed from the dying man with his last breath. - Sainte-Beuve died in his houseßue Montpar nasse, No. 11; in the chamber on the first floor (second story), which was at-once his bedroom and study. This apartment, like the rest Of the house, is furnished with old-fashioned elm ; a wardrobe, a bureau, easy chairs' and col - anion chairs covered with- green damask, books scattered everywhere . , twoplaster busts right and left on the =into], aniron bedstead with a very thin mattress and no curtains; these are all the comforts. The life iu this habitation ww,.perfectly patriarchal, and Sainte-Beuve has died as he lived. When we entered the chamber we have described, the 'corpse, covered to the chin with a white cloth, had the air of slum bering; an extreme pallor spread over the face was the only indication that the soul had flown and that death had paralyzed that 'vast brain forever. A few minutes. before his death Sainte-Beuve had-recovered the fine ex- . pression of his Lest days, and after death his Lead was beautiful and imposing, We find in the - Gan/0/s: Sainte-Beuve remarked to his housekeeper, Mile. Boitard, a former school-teacher, " lam dying; let us give to the poor until the end. Let us try to do good up to 'the moment of going." Visitors who surprised Sainte-Beuve in the morning would see him handing to his servant the copy needed by the printers, and • - e • rakLd ..ese packets contained his alms, done up. by Saintelteuve himself the evening before. • From the same journal: Yesterday at three o'clock Dr. Pioge, in the presence of several persons t made the autopsy of the corpse of Sainte-Beuve. Three stones were discovered; the largest was the size of a large hen's egg - , the - two others are triangular_ and measure nine centimetres. According to the doctors these stoners could never have been extracted in the patient's lifetime; the opera tion - would have certainly' occasioned death. Atter the autopsythe corpse was embalmed. According to a clause in the will, the inter ment will take place at tea, Sainte-I3euve having expressed the wiah to be buried at the earliest possible hoar of the morning. • , Sainte-Beuve was particularly well known to all -- the booksellers on the Quays - Voltaire and Malaquais. Very frequently he visited them at an extremely early hour, rummaging among the shelves, glancing through a certaitt volume, and conversing with the booksellers, who all held him in the greatest respect. Ve ryfond of rare bookq, Sainte-Bence used to in struct all the shopkeepers to send him such antique and curious volumes as came up for sale. The Charity of the deceased was ,tiroverbial, and in this, connection we are told' of a touch ing piece of feeling on the part of one of his pensioners. Some months since Sainte-Beuve was obliged by sickness to keep his bed. A poor old man whom the author employed oc casionally to do his errands, and whom he always paid liberally, came to beg for a rather larger assistance than ordi nary. Finding his protector in bed, the old man turned pale and began to weep. Saiete-Deuv e the cause of his emo tion. "Ah !" replied the poor wretch, "you see, Monsieur Sainte-Deuve, if you should go and die, I have nothing to do but kill myself too, for you are my only means of existence !" The phrase broight a smile "to the lips of Sainte-Beuve, who consoled the _poor tellow by giving 'tan what he asked. Sainte-Beuve was passionably fond of ani mals. He bad in his house three tom-cats and two tabbies. The latter, both clothed in mag nificent black-and-wte suits of fur, are named Glorieuse and Jolie. There were likewise two rabbits, which, having grown very tame, played about the garden with the cats. More than once the cook conceived the plan of burying these poor rabbits in a ragout, but eacktime Sainte-Beuve reprieved them. Care is ifdrw taken that these poor animals whom lie loved so well should want for nothing. Some pigeons that were accustomed to fly to the study-table of Sainte-Beuve to pick crutuns of bread, have paid' their usual visit to-day; finding nobody, they began to coo, hearing which some one entered the room and gave them_the crumbs they have been used to re ceive Store. odS "_t§ Here is the rmsage in Sainte-Deuve's will relative to his funeral: "I desire that no religious ceremony beheld upon my decease. " I demand of the compa,nies and bodies of which I have the honor to boa member, not to cause themselves to be iepresented at my interment by any deputations, happy and grateful if some of my colleagues and con freres will care to accompany my remains "I do not wish that written invitations be did tributed after my decease. A simple announce ment of the day and hour in the papers will suffice. I desire that this hour be the earliest possible (nine in the morning, for instance, or ten at the latest). I ask to be carried directly from my' residence to Montparnasse Ceme tery, to the vault where my mother lies, with out passing through the church,which I could not suffer without violatibg the sincerity of my.sentiments. Arrived at the grave, I do not wish any discourse nor eulomun to be pro monnced over the tomb:u-- - -- - A criticism on Sainte-Beuve in the Avenir Nationa4 terminates as follows: Like all those who,. prcift.....ssin,g disdain of politics and social pinision,have no attachment to life beyond their individual passions and personal interests, 3lons. Sainte-Beuve over inclined to the side of.him who grasped the power, not by conviction, but in hopes of an officialsituatien., Since 1852, the title of Sen ator had been his besetting, desire. To obtain it he spared netting,' and he 3marchea for It, like Sixtiis the Ififth with stooping back. His end.. attained, he ,tuts lifted himself , ,again. 'What would he not have gained to have stood upright sooner! • till, we must- remember that aiming the letters addressed to the Senate, it was Sainte- Bettye alone who defended, in two celebrated discourses, the rights of the press . and of opinion. Bin in what times do we live, that, at the hour when Saintoßeuve dies, people as. members,, that in an Assembly where authors sit as. members, there rests to US no longer a single defender of the cause of free letters rand free thought!•, • —A —A priestwas confeZiiiTa --- a old broupier at Baden. "Well, my brother, this is a solemn hour,; what have you to say?" The dying, man' promptly replied: "Net Much, father,' but i'can day this: .1 saw once my hie the iner.t extraordinary thing that ever happened on nin eag." rth ; I saW,2B, • comeput cloven times run- tHILADELPHIA - ; FIB 'HE C 'Release of the Steamer Lillian.' We translate .the_following lines_ from _the Cuban paper La. Revolucton, of yesterday: "We are able to assure our readers that the Cuban' man-of-war Cespedes, or Lillian,. has _been released by the British authorities of Nassau!' , We publish this fact in order to show that what/ the, newspapem here said .About this steamer, that she Was to be ,considered as a pirate by the` tribunal of New Providence, is entirely false. We repeat that this last fact IS not true, •and that the Cuban raan•of-"war Cespede.s liaB already, been releasedby the authorities. ;.THE CUBAN- BEIrOtETION. , , Operations in the Vicinity' of Trinidad.. Pilgittileant Admissions of a Spanish Journal-41m insurgents Pronounced Lords oi the t tioill—Patility of Spanish Efforts ~ tikuninSt , Them..:lfteturn Of the Column Under Colonel Quiros. • TnneinAtt, bet. 20s 1869.-1 do not know that I can better dentibe to you the situation of ailitirs hi this vicinity than by quoting from a very significant article of the Imparcial, a Spanish journal of this city, which appeared in its issue of the 17th. Let inn premise that the hard words concerning the insurgents, who are carrying on the war, accordingto the best light they have, are of - the paper and not my own: - , - "What has passed in the neighborhood of Trinidad for the last three months it is impos sible to. believe . without having seen. This. place, of 14,000 inhabitants, has a battalion of volunteers, a body of Bomberos (armed fire men), and a section of cavalry, and yet it and the country about is under the contrel of a party of incendiaries and assassins, who. are lords of the , soil. Not a man can go to bathe in the river between the. hill La Vigia (on which the city is situated—Tn.AriseAxon) and those opposite, without exposing himself to • be•killed or. captured. This pass, which is as smooth as the palm of the hand• and of no greater size than two kilometers long and one broad, has been the scene, day after, day, of incendiarism- and assassinations which have been recorded in these cofincruis: Commencing at the shop, situated out towards the river Canes, which we have seen burned, there followed an attempt to burn the bridge on the railroad ; the firing of the estate Abajo, at the far end of the pass ; of the other bridges on the railroad by Papayal; the houses on the country estate of his .Excellency Selior Don Justo G. Cantero, and, in conclusion ) the hundred attacks on laborers on the different estates situated within, this small radios—dll committed without interruption or without rie's anT assassins, eil3°ne , who only atteck.netred..cla-e— -fenceless and the solitary. This has convinced us that uplreis the system of . operations is changed here these burnings and other crimes such as were, perpetrated on the estate La Pastore yesterday, within two kilometres of this city, will continue." What the Imparcial herein refers to as hap- _pening at La _Pastora , maysbessummednp-hi a word. YeSterday a negro came in and re ported the presence of a band of insurgents, by whom he had been seized and tied, but had made his escape. A detachment of vol unteers went out, did not come up with, the insurgents. They found one Chinaman dead and two mortally wounded. The latter. were brought here, and one of them has since died. That the sallies of the volunteers from this city in pursuit of the insurrects, and, in deed, the character of the operations through out the jurisdiction and others in the vicinity, have been wofully defective, is certaitt. Its admisgon is significant, and shows either the weakness of 'the Spaniards or the wisdom of the insurgents in selecting a style of warfare against which their enemies can do nothing The column of eight, hundred men, which, following the late visit of Lesca, went out, on the 14th under coimimnd t pf Colonel Demetrio - Quiros, in pursuit. of the insurgents ) have re turned without seeing any enemy. They marched to a point in the mountains,which the insurgents style the "Sebitetopol of the Cinco Villas;" but found it deserted, and then returned again without having accomplished anything. The same old story, and so it is like to continue:—Herald. , The Cnhans in New York. Soifer Nestor' Ponce de -Leon, the well known-Goban-journalist-and publiciet, writes to the Tribune that, the progranune purporting tb be his, and sent by the Captain-General to his agent at Washington, is "spurious and of Spanish fabrication. This document.repre sents that Selior Ponce is a member of the Cuban Junta, which is not true, and it advo cates Chinese immigration, which never bad a more earnest opponent than he. Seiler Ponces has denounced the malicious - misuse of his name in a lett& to the Vox de Cuba, and as sures his -American friends, with proper in dignation, that he could not bade written the stupid forgery. A meeting of Cubans is re ported to have been held yesterday for the purpose of condemntng the Junta. The ill- I fated Gardiner's Island expedition, the failure of the war-steamer Hornet, and the misman agement of the Lilian enterprise, are pointed out as the cause of this action. In tins latter it is complained. that a band of filibusters, have been left on one of the desert' keys of Florida to await the uncertain reap pearance of the steamer Lilian,, the mutiny „aboard which, it is charged,, was disgraceful. Col Cristo, supposed to have gone with this Lilian expedition, has returned to New York, The Junta, though composed of petriotic men, is charged with a want of secrecy and de spatch, and some' of the Cubans--a consider able number of whom remain in New York— are anxious that the chief powers of their cause shall be vested in ono able man, well assisted, but with diseretionary la.culti es. The steamer Morro Castle (whose lonirser we have to thank for papers)-has brought accessions to the Cuban rinks in New York(, THE BQW AT. SALT LAKE. Signs of tholirlies--ComingEwentsand their hh adows. SALT LAKE: CITY; Oct. I.l.—The .atmosphere of Utah is laden with "portents dire," augur ing . a speedy breaking up of the Mormon hierarchy. ' First, the outspoken denUnCiation of polygamy by Vice-President Colfax fell like a 'tomb-shell into the camp, and Was an admonition' by •no means to be slighted. As an illustration of its 'effect; witnessed the following..l Itch) ent -:—E. Sloan, a Mormon, and local editor - of the Telegraph, feeling aggrieved at the applause with which the "Gentiles" received Mr. fax , 's - retnar.ks,Made an observation to ths ef fect that those present were nothing but a set of thieves and vagabonds. Mr. Sloan was roughly handed by 'one of the. bystanders, who was arrested, carried before a Mormon Justice of the,Peace, and fined $l4 for. the as sault. The second tivent Of recent occurrnce, and of- significance, , • is the... excommuni cation of several ---leading . men - in the Mormon Church.' A - short time ago, T. B. H. Stenhouse, editor of the Salt Luke Telegrcrph, Win. S. Godbe, a leading Mor mon merchant, E. L. Harrison and E. W. Tullidge, editors and proprietors of the Utah Alogaztne, William Dunbar and Robert Nes lin, actors in Brigham's theatre were called upon to answer for contumacious conduct toward the Church authorities, and, failing to make a good delence,•were solemnly excom mmaicated.' Their real offence seems to haVe been an attempt to . make a profit on their individual account, which did not suit the • Elders. Dr. Taggart, - ,the new Assessor of Internal Revenue;•loOks sharp, after, the Mormons on the Revenue question, and is cordially hated by Brigham and his fol loweni for the .deter_naination , he has mani fested to make the Mormon' Church and peo plo pay their share of the National debt.. H' also is quietly, watching several illicit distil leries, for some of the Saints actually hay ') such' iitablishments in full. operation in .th OUR. WHOLE DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1869. krEER: monntains,'which no Revenue officer hay yet had tlle temerity to penetrate. • • HEAVY HALL OF COUNTERFEIT GREENRACKS• Nearly 812,000 Capttered:::AireSt - of the supposed . Lieader ofthe Ging or western Counterfeiters. -..; •;.; ‘.„ (From the! cincirmatiEvenlng Times, 00.',21.) •• • For along time our officers haveheen aware. oY the :existence of an extenif 7 -:;‘* hand of coun . terfeitera' t having its ranilficaticms in almost all of the principaleities and towns' of the West end South. ' For monthsthe.United-States de tectives have been Constantly on ' the alert, in hopesof arresting sonae' of the leaders of the gapg,:btrt , without avail, until at last it,almost appealed that ,the violators of • the law could work with; imipunity... Redently, merely „by, - chance, the of fi cers became convinced that a -nian•named "Ssae Levi, a resident of OsgoOd, Ind:, *ha one, if not the main' leader, of the ' mysterions gang, and after eensultation it was agreed upon to keep the elosest watch of his nievensents,which was done,and, as the sequel will show, with perfect Success, - • From certain movements of Levi, las t' week . the officers concluded that he was on the point Of making a trip, and ,by the I - greatest Shrewdness saw him take the:train and come to this city, putting up on Saturday at • the Walnut Street House. Knowingthe game to be perfectly safe, and to avoid the least possi ble chance, the servants of, the law allowed matters to remain _perfectly, quiet until this' morning,' when Officer Gus Colcher. and . United States Deputy Marshal proceeded to the Walnut Street House for the purpose of making the arrest. . On opening the door of• Levi's rooni they found him and another fellow, named Clark, in the act of assorting. out and counting a • large amount of greenbacks of the denomina tions of five , tees, twenties and fifties, For • a Moment Levi, who is said to be the most powerful man physicalklin the State of Indi ana, seemed determined on resistance, but the coolness of the otlicersibacked by the presence of a couple of cocked revolvers, changed his notion, and both the men quietly consented to have the ,bracelets placed on their wrists. The officers at once took their birds, with their booty, before United States Commis sioner Halliday, who, after a preliminary ex ordination, committed . the men to the County Jail in default of 1 -..10,000 bail each. Clark, the confederate of Levi, is a very genteel looking fellow and the last man in the world who woule-be taken for a "shover of the queer." Welook - upon - this — arres as a most im portant ever made in this, section of the coun try, as it is the entering wedge toward ,hieak mg up the most powerful band of counter ; festers ever organized in the Union. Levi has long been under the surveillance of tbe.police, and, if we mistake not, has already Nerved a "stretch" in the Kentucky State Penitentiary at Frankfort. • - - Clark - claims - that - he - was'inveigledinto - his 'new profession and that he can prove his pre vious good character. The amount of money captured is nearly $12,000, which would have been ,passed upon tour people within the next few days had not these arrests been made so ,opportunely, Cariosity of the Prihiee of Waleq. The extravagant curiosity of the Prince of Wales to visit Tranpmann, the Wholesale Paris murderer, appears to have stricken the French, populace with something akin to consternation. His request was very properly denied, and the august suppliant -,was compelled to return'home with his morbid desire ungratified. This passion • for ~i ntervielving'""distinguis.'hed crinunals is not altogether new in the history :;'of the royal family of England, althongh,we believe; it has slunthered,for many generations. We can recall no other instance later than that of James the First,who not only prepared the ex amination of Guy .Fawkes, but, according to tradition, often visited that explosive male factor in the dungeon of Little Ease, and was, moreover, accustomed to regale himself of an afternoon.. by going down to the torture cells of the Tower and luxuriating in the • „-a-sit • • ruse who suffered by the rack. Scenes like, these, of course, can never recur, but, the revived spectacle of au intimate com munication between murderers and monarchs woidd be one not calculated to add to the enlightenment of the nineteenth century, Tlibupe, _l4l ItE3IOVAL OP Tin: CAPITOL. Ie :Various Opinions on the Subject. The Tribune says : If the• Capitol of the United States' is to be removed to the Valley of the West, or, in deed, to - any other location, - it is, for a hun dred reasons, desirable that all preliminary discussions of the measure should be con ducted in an amicable spirit, and that • all sectional feeling regarding the question should, for the sake of our future, safety, be disconraged. We therefore regret to find • one or two gentlemen in the Convent„ien at St. Louis talking in <-a tone of semi-: secession, and using a - kind of argument which too much resembles threatening. The Lresence of Mr. Stuart, of Alabama, in the i2onvention was, to say the least, ominous, for Mr. Stuart was a noted Secessionist, and he took no palms to conceal the fact front the del creates, hat avowed it with an . pieivant sort :of bravado: Again, Mr. Eagan, of St. LOUL9, was exceedingly violent in his denunciation of • the Eastern States, from which he plaimed that the West (and South also) had "suffered nothing lint wrong, and outrage," It is no. wonder that the warmestfriends of the West and Southwest' 'Were alarmed by the turn which the disermions were taking,' or . that Gov. Pile, of New Mexico, advised the Con vention not to provoke the enmity of the West , until it knew better the. real state ' of Eastern opinion. The "wrong" and , outrage" which the West has suffered at the hands of the seaboard States has consisted mainly in an unlimited supply of money , and an 'equally 'unlimited supply of men, without which there would have been no West to speak of at all. How ever, until it is absolutely necessary, we shall not suffer ourselve.s to be betrayed into re-" crimination ,-- Tl2o7Matter is too important for a passionate consideration. Is.E.w Yonx, entre(' last eve= just off Chamber ferry-boat Delo; the Hoboken 11 .. undei the impress the other, the pil neously, td the. of the steamer ~. away, and she tva The damage don i $1,.500. The pass T though no one w. intense 6rn mitee 1 • The Cliing,ressii charge the inve and 3lasterman, hates Le„laden prisoned by Lopt all6ge,lll-treated Atlantic Squadro in this • city. Ito naval officers ha , statements differ set forth in thi IlaSterrnan tA:e vestigation. With regard to is reported thatt made en 'ex parq discharged all bu CRI'MIE THE PARIS 3P IIDEIL. TW 'YORK. -A serious collision oc in the kludson river, between the Pavonia and the Morristown, of They hurl stopped; but, ton that each would wait for }ts'started forward simulta ollision Vollowed. One side forristown was wholly torn otherwise seriously injured. to her will amount to about ngers were much frightened, i s injured, and for some time Et prevailed auton t .,... them. nal Committee 'having in tlgation in the ease of Bliss ho members of the United n Paraguay, who were im , and subsequently, as they u board veasels of the South are- now taking testimony r,Adruiral Davis and other re been examined and their somewhat, from the facts as memorial of Bliss and ongress asking for the in- the Gold. Exchange Bank, it e receiver, Mr. Jordan, has report, stating that he has $148,00Q of the bank's ludo bts Cduess, and of. that sum a. large portion wa -piobably invalid; that ho had 3174,000 in un settled of which !s76,oooLwas really dOubtft4;ifild he had still 8290,000. of capital untouched. Judge Oardozo took no action ou the report: , United. States Commissioner Aewton yes- . terday, denied an application for the release or immediate trial of .Francois Earez, who is held under tbe Extradition Treaty, with the Swiss CopfederatiOn on 'a charge 'of haying forged certain commercial paper, worth about 29,000 francs. The case will be investigated November 1. -• • ' THE 4EIIJUHENWAL.:4ZIONCIL. --.,-. Fulmination Against OperatiC Haste in Chnrehes—All the, Good, Tunes in the Hands of Satan. '' ' It is said that a number of the archbishops„ bishops and priests who have recently sailed from the Unit&l'Statas to tale part - in the (Ecumenical Council will introduce the sub ject of operatic music in churches, with a view of having it condensed by a decree. Many or the clergy object to snail , music on the ground that, it `not ' only distuits the devotions of , the worshippers, .but removes their thoughts from.; the 'altar to the organ and the choir: Theia are few. Catholic Churches in this city' where the services are accompanied by florid music, and their congregations are not larger than those of other temples. It is a sipificant fact that the :majority of. Episcopal bishops of the Enited iVites are also./opposed to operatic music in the climehes, and one of thenumber, Bishop Potter,has r watedly denounced it.' I:et some of the liftt odist revivalist clergy still lament the fact'that all the, really inspir ing music is in the hands of Satan.—Sun. 19LATTERS . I . IIT GENERAL. PARIS IIIPPODIe0MR: - Plans have been submitted for a new ,p -pcdroine in Paris, to take the place of the ugly wooden structure recently, happily, destroyed by fire. The new building is to be made en— tirely of iron and stone, and is to be adapted not only to exhibitions of wild animals, to tournaments and acrobatic performances, but also to sea pieces. A spectacle called "The Isthmus of Suez," which has long been inpre parati on, will probably be the first of the pieces in which water will be introduced. It is hoped that the building may even be so far advanced by the middle of November as to. admit of the first performance of this spectacle taking place on the same day with the open ing of the canal. A series of tableaux, is con templated, all relating to Egypt, and calling for the introduction of water in large quanti ties. We...are_to_beshostructiou of Pharaoh's army in the Red Sea, the cataracts , of the Nile, and the inundation of the Nile. FRENCH IN THR . BRITIEHI NAVY A refreshing story is told by the London Times of the state of education in the British navy. It appears that when the French fleet visited Spfithead the admiral in command of the EngliSh fleet signaled to all the ofiicers of the snug:lron who could speak French to ac company the pilots on board the French vessels. But one officer answered the signal. cnE.Enr 1.71. AMUSEMENTS. An exchange says: The German town of Barmen must be t cheerful place to live in. At least, such is the inference from the peculiar amusements which it would appear from recent proceedings in the police court, occasionally occur there. A gentleman was charged with biting off two inches of a cat's tail, the animal being held at the same time by another '° gentleman." The Berghs of Wupperthal instituted a prosecu tion against these beings, who pleaded in de fence that the biter bad made a bet that he would do it, and that a reduction in the length of the animal's tail would benefit it. For the gratification of the cats the , biter and his accomplice were fined $2O. YOUNG PIIETENDERS, The New York World says : - A pair of "YOung ; Pretenders" have turned up inLondon, and are to be found constantly in the British Museum. Their names are John Sobreski Stuart and; Edward Stuart, and their history is thus told by our authority, the Guardkm : Charles Edward, the only ori ginal "Young • Preteuder," married in Italy, in 1772, Princess Louise, of Stolberg, daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, Prince of. Stol berg-Gedern, and maternally allied to the irm es, - 11117i3 a son was born of this mar riage, at Sienna, and for state reasons the fact was kept a secret. The child was brought on' board an English frigate, and subsequently educated'as the,child of the, commander, Ad miral O'Halloran. After Wards this child was brought to Scotland. Having grown up he was married to an English lady, and so late as was living. His children are - the Stuarts alluded to. A TAX ON DOGS. tThe proposition to put a tax on dogs is made in some quarters, for the benefit of the nation at large. .It is estimated that there are six 'millions of dogs in the United States. Levy a tax of orie dollar on each of these ani mals, and you have an annual income equal to the currency interest on 5100,000,000 of the national debt. This 'calculation rather savors of the Micawber school of finance. Of the six million dogs said to be- in existence; how many are there for which anybody would be: willing 'to pay - a dollar r? The friend and companion of man is soon much oftener in English households than in this country, and yet the dog tax in England pro duces; comparatively, a more trifle. It is evaded under all sorts ,of pretexts, and is alto gether more bother than it is worth. Besides, is there not a sufficient number of things taxed already? The wise course would be to reduce that number, and make up for the loss by a judicious redistribution of taxes. Several States have a dog tax' now, but we had better not look to that source for any additions to the national exchequer.—.W. Times. THIS, CZAR NICHOLAS. Stories of the Emperor Nicholas continue to appear. The latest used to be attributed in our school days to Frederick the Great—but no matter. :Nicholas, it is said, was roaming about the barracks incog. ono evening, and saw through tu open door oneof his. best offi cers asleep with, his head on a table .and with a manuscript before him. The Czar stole in and found that it was cash sde wa do a n cc b o l un th t e credit w si h de ic , h nd t c h n tan e d among other items - 'l;ooo'roubles 113 alaeltsion to the officer's mother. The debt surplus was 7 3 7000 roubles,Land,:was followectly the query,. "Who will pay the sum?" . over which the officer had evidently puzzled himself to ex haustion. The Emperor quietly wrote "Nicholas," a. 4 an answer, and went away. u The young man awoke, aStondedat the dread autograph that met his eye, and on the follow ing day received an imperial letter with the 3,600 roubles. • THE CHIVILNGTON illAssAcar. *.:CJWIPSED. An Indian llama Razed' by,. . a Prairie Fire.-. Upward et One Ilundred Indians Burned taDeatir. We learn from Captain Hill, commander of, Fort Rice, the details of one of the, most bar rewing tales otiose by fire that has ever come within the range- of latter-day occurrences.' • About five weeks since a band of the "Sioux," , under "Little Beer" . Were camped on the south aside of the Missouri river, above Fort. Rice, , • A --large , "number--of— squaws with their papooses accompanied the Indians. 'They had camped for the night, and not thinking Of danger, bad. all gone to sleep; about midnight the prairie .contiguous to their lodges was set on fire, and before - the, alarm could' be given, „or measures( taken to save-their lives, about ono hundred wore con sumed in the flames, together with a consider able amount Of dried meats, and such articles as they usually carry with them, or use while in camp; about seventy ponies were , likewise' burned, the others made their escape by. be ing driven to a place of satety.—,o'ieux City Time& YETRERSTOL P • -,,f PRICE THREE ans' A.Am) FANCIr rfer ex-h "esty Isabella,-brabout gs• hiinse:keepin_ n Prague. ••i,;' —Lord Derby is'dead, but his race stalPee'r. iStS. —.A: "settled aversion" is ground ter a .(iik , '''4l 4 / vorce, in Indiana. - -- - --Auber is writing a new operator . ter, wideh he ',Says shall be 11.18 last. to . -A , —The Itothschilds liave-been shin speoulations, and are now, WrothscldkiztjAi -L-Sojurner Truth is abont , ,to visit:-WitablW-gton, , whieli is the last place for,T,rtitta f , t?',o 'r remaltvabojournbe ' ' - - Reddy the , 'lllacl.%mith 711a.s Pledge_, which is about the only thing he Zell took that he had, no chance of keeping , —The It oval Mint iii London has rec,eived-alt order to stripe "off 20,000 military medabl, memorating the Abyssi an expedition.. —A Mr. Mendlehall, o Columbu,s, Ohio, lust' just succeeded in provin&,to the residenbi l i' ;-;„ that locality that the world movas. "( "it —The Hnb is excited ever a report that'AttiW, Dickinson will appear in spectacular drare4,`,0 t „'' the Boston Theatre.. ,; • —The Paris Fqxqo receives newfv. , r Italy that TheoPhile Ciantier has inarriektis Jetta, Grist, ,a fascinating vitAialicerleitc, , Grand Opera, , , '• —A San Frincisco. , „ Chinaman, fearful of assassination, fordfies himself by lashing his account, books about the more Vital partzta his body. , -tA , wedding at, Cairo, 111., was, postpanid the other day by a telegraph -froin the groom, which read: Have to wait till next , week. • Wife 'has overhauled me. —The Parts Chorivari, under the title of 04 A_ • New Version of the Pantin Murder,” reinti. ; ,senta 'Prussia killing another victim (Baden), ; and putting it in the grave with the fernier •(i - lanover,Saxony, &c.) —A new police regulation in IVarsaw pun- , ishes the introduction of forbidden books or pamphlets with from five to fifteen years' exiki to Siberia. All caricatures on the person of;'' the Emperor are punishable with death. -They have a public library' in lifelbourn4.- - which is open to all upon one condition, viz.: Every one :who, enters must have' cletuk hands. Soap, water and towels provided irt the ante-room. —St. James's Theatre, in London,advertisw: Mrs. John Wood aslsole lessee and manager.; • CSB, Mr. E. P. Hingston as acting ruananer„ and- amongst the , oompauy - Blr. Barton - Mr. Mark Smith, Mr. A:W. Yoting and Mr/ Frank Lace • all fa r ll I 0 s try. .e t eatre ie to . 'be•devoted to, light comedy, operetta and ballet. —The Intthzational 'of London states that the Viceroy'ofEgypt has concluded another loan. of 35,600,060 francs, that he has forbidden the official Turkish journal, the Turquie; to enter Egypt, and that be has caused the Sitltan'd letter, which was placarded' in public, t'o" - te. torn down., On the othar-bancLiLmentione that tliSTiltari does not intend taking active, measures to .enforee his sovereignty until after the inauguration:ceremonies of the Suez Canal —A prodigal returned to , the house of his brother and sister in Pontiac Michigan, the , other day, and was received :with open arms,' ate the fatted calf and all , that sort elf ,„ thing and two days after built a nice tire kerosene oil under the bedchamber in ord t to urn 'them to death and secure the pr —Prussia furnishes a good educational rew • cord. Less than four per cent. of the reoruits, for the army this year could neither read net write. The percentage was very touch in creased by the large proportion in Posen. , In. Prussian Saxony;ttie.Rhenisla provinces and other districts the proportion was less than one per cent. In WurtembeTg, 'from which 41,0001nen have been drawn into the armies in nine years, only eight in all were unable to read and write. , ' , 44When. Malibran Was , young she disliked' to sing the part of ‘.'Desdextona":on the stage,, father, Garcia, having' greatly frightened, her on one occasion When she was playing. in" New York. He threatenedthat if she did not• come up to his - .expdctations, he would,. as , !Gthello actually her. Malibran. ; did w en • e o was stealing up to . the recumbent "Desde inona,"a shrill scream rang through the, 'house, and Malibran, jumping up 'front the couch, - rushed on 'the stage. The curtainwus let down and the opera, came' to an untimely;'end. Malibran was MiSsing, - searched for by, the police, - but for two days.she could not be - found. Then she was -discovered hiding be— hind some timber in a timber yard, half dead with fright and starvation. She was never afterwards. able 'to sing the part - without a- fainting fit, . AMUSEMENTS. —Boucicault's beautiful drama, _Hunted, Down Avil be performed at the Chestnut this evening. the - Arch All's IVell:That Ends Welt will be presented in capital style. . • --At the Walnut this evening Mr. 'Edwin Booth will iioerform,././andet. At the matinee to-morrow Mr; Booth _will give his farewell performance, appearing in his great character of "Ila.mlet." - Miss ~Lucille Western commence an engagement on Monday even ing, Novemberll. —At the A.cademyof Music to-night and to-morrow night Carlotta Patti, assisted by.. Messrs. Joseph Hermaus, Theodore Habel mann, Ronconi, • and other artista, Will give concerts. There will, undoubtedly, be very lar„,ae and brilliant audiences each evening. is understood Mlle. Patti will give a charity: concert before her departure from the city. —Hermann, the Prestidigitateur Will give exhibitions of Magic at the A.cademy of Music. during next week. —Duprez & Benedict's Minstrels present ' en excellent bill, chock full of Ethiopian' odt dities, at their New Seventh Street Opera HOMO., —Prof. James McClintock, M. D., will de liver a course of lectures on "The Science of Life," illustrated by beautiful models, Ztze., commencing on Monday evening, November. ISt. - From the success which attended former course in May last, we argue that thle: l, course prove -equally-interesting successful. delentlfle Zeal. • , Professorllantegazza, the physiologist;.,,,was' recently engaged in investigation ou the loweSt.'r fauna of life. Believing that he could deo4, t the Very begin»ing of organic existencelndAr; ' T infusion he had made, he kept his eye steadily updn it, in the microscope, for sixteen hOurts;':. without intermission, until compelled by 'ex haustion to leave it Conenmptlen in Iceland. This article may be like that on snakei/in, Ireland"; for the disease called consumptioiCia wholly unknown in Iceland, except in persodo , ' who , come thither already afflicted with , . It. But this does not make that desolate, frozen,, barbarous island a charming, residence. Beaei die of tubercles her than"!Ong ' i tliefe - tT, “Better fifty years of Europe than a eyeks• - or catbay.” How 40 Pot Down' Gold. . rresident Sabase, of Hayti, in whose do*.- ions gold recently advanced to 180,000 per 04;1" 1 . or $l,BOO for one, put the brokers in'''' - pt*,ll;' '; and pressed a score of them into the /atliOy Result, a temporary panic in the colOred. , ?Tekvat'::W e l, public's gold room ; but provisions reftts4, fall, and pot& is still quoted at lOp,9oo,*lAr!rfj barier: MEE= • -',.;: ': . '.±.-,...::::i....]:.:3:1*-':' :.''',e1.4,.•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers